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(I <9s S • / mm mm mm siw: mmm mmm JUDY” by Maxine Navy Suede 51/6 mzr. Pha Hill I Vv / ITS THE \ PARTS YOU CAN’T SEE THAT MAKE Stylex worth V SEEING A SPORTS WEAR § ( SIG Ml D AND TAIL ofi £ D BY ■CHA!STC HU BCH CIOTH/HC COMPANY “MEG” by Robin Mond Navy and White Calf ? 45/3 (Left) “JIMMY” by Robin Mond Pigskin 57/9 (Right) “PURSUIT” by Physical Culture White Buck and Navy Kid 59/AT BRIDGERS LTD. WHAKATANE The Strand Phone 13s, u«t

Hay & Silage saved this farmer £4SO Here ss clear proof that ftie provtsten of adequate, good-quality hay and silage pays handsomely. This example was recently quoted by the Technical Officer to the N.Z. Dairy Board's Herd Recording Department from material collected by the Board's Consulting Officers in the course of their work and contained in their, diaries. The owner of a highly-efficient dairying unit in the Waikato makes no secret of the ssßsaliiSij "fact that one of his main concerns is the provision of* ample supplementary feed for his herd. There is no doubt that this policy is a worthwhile one, for although it necessitates more work, often more worry, and better'than average managerial ability during the spring and summer months, once the extra area has been safely harvested either as hay or silage, the seasons of possible and probable feed shortage can be faced with confidence. Food reserves on this farm at the beginning of May were estimated at I ton of hay plus tons of silage per cow—and this was considered inadequate by the owner. The question may well be asked, "Do results on this farm justify a policy necessitating so much extra work and worry?" An examination of the production on this farm during the disastrous drought season of 1945-46 should provide an answer. The tested herds in his area dropped in production by an average of 761 b. fat per cow when compared with the previous season. The fall in production on this farm amounted to only slb. per cow. The herd in that year comprised 64 cows, so at current prices the value of production, which could to a large extent be attributed to the saving of liberal amounts of hay and silage, amounted to approximately £450. There is no doubt that the extra butterfat could well be utilised by a hungy Europe, It is up to the individual farmer to decide whether this form of insurance against sub-normal feed-growing conditions is preferable to such drastic measures as herd reduction and premature drying-off^ofj*'^ the herd. .oagcotiua lo noitoslea is sldclißvs won .ots> BETTER EARN MANAGEMENT means more .noabnH .J ,0) .bhl sievh .08 enorbt I ,9013 81UOfOD f'W* Tja<m isl h£L .rioso bloD b>nf& -ni 39>fGm II _ ' i tdlwbs oi -\S rnoT|tf r «m)firb griibijlo ISSUED BY THE AID FOR BRITAIN NATIONALj qJ _\££ merit sooiiq lie a zmvSit

Permanent link to this item
Hononga pūmau ki tēnei tūemi

https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/BPB19481124.2.39.3

Bibliographic details
Ngā taipitopito pukapuka

Bay of Plenty Beacon, Volume 13, Issue 24, 24 November 1948, Page 7

Word count
Tapeke kupu
476

Page 7 Advertisements Column 3 Bay of Plenty Beacon, Volume 13, Issue 24, 24 November 1948, Page 7

Page 7 Advertisements Column 3 Bay of Plenty Beacon, Volume 13, Issue 24, 24 November 1948, Page 7

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